Panem et Circenses at Largo da Carioca, Brazil: The Urban Diversity Focused on People-Environment Interactions
Author(s)
Pinheiro, Ethel; Duarte, Cristiane Rose
Abstract
This paper explores how outdoor performances actively define and create the essential character of open spaces in Brazil, a country known for its overwhelming abundance of outdoor life. The authors investigate the importance of open spaces within the urban fabric, and consider the ways in which the history and aspirations of the local community become meaningfully woven into these spaces. The authors chose an open space, or largo, in the city of Rio de Janeiro called Largo da Carioca, which embodies the relation between collective memory and appropriation. They then consider how the Largo has consistently been used as an arena of performance despite the intense urban changes and movement of people over the last 50 years. As a way of grasping the dynamic of the activities of the Largo da Carioca, the authors adopted two approaches: historical-evolutive and participant observation. The first concerns the evolution of the urban space of Largo da Carioca and the background of outdoor performances as a way of introducing the popular arts of Rio de Janeiro, and as a way of connecting the theoretical analysis to the field research. In the second approach, the authors use tools and methods from ethnographic research such as field annotations, direct interviews and visual resources, like photographs and video-shooting, so as to fulfill and complement their work. They argue that the urban essence of these performances is related to the ‘inviting’ conditions of this particular urban site and to its (in)formal structures, uses, and regular activities. It invites – because of its openness, formal and social largeness, and amplitude – a singular melange of uses and appropriations through which the formal and social are amalgamated.